Event: Stockwell Bus Garage Open day
When: 21 June 2014 10:00 till 16:00
Where: SW4 6ST, London, UK
Info about the event:
Designed and built in the 1950s by Adie, Button and Partners, Stockwell bus garage is recognised as one of the most important modernist buildings in London. See inside this remarkable bus garage and find out what makes it so noteworthy at this special bus garage open day as part of Year of the Bus 2014. Along with the opportunity to ride a bus through the bus wash, and see some fine examples of heritage buses, including the museum’s recently restored B-type bus, there will also be a mobile exhibition, a bouncy bus, and a range family fun activities.
Info about the Garage:
Stockwell Garage is a large bus garage in London, coded “SW” by London Transport. It was designed by Adie, Button and Partners, with the engineer A E Beer, and was opened in 1952.
On a cursory view of the exterior, it is typical of much of the architecture built in the post war reconstruction period in London around the Festival of Britain. There was a steel shortage at the time, so concrete was used for the roof structure instead of the steel girder structure that had previously been the norm.
At Stockwell the opportunity was taken to create a bravura piece of reinforced concrete design. The 393 ft (120 m) long roof structure is supported by ten very shallow “two-hinged” arched ribs. Each is 7 ft (2.1 m) deep at the centre of the arch, 10 ft 6 in (3.20 m) at the end, and spans 194 ft (59 m) Cantilevered barrel vaults between, topped by large skylights, span the 42 ft (13 m) between each pair of ribs. The vaults are crossed by smaller ribs to prevent torsion. Seen from the outside, the main arches are visible as outward-leaning buttresses, with a segmental curve to each bay forming a flowing roof line.
The garage provides 73,350 sq ft (6,814 m2) of unobstructed parking space and could originally house 200 buses. At the time of construction it was Europe’s largest unsupported roof span.
Since 1988 the garage has been a Grade II* Listed Building reflecting its importance in post-war architectural and engineering history. (info from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockwell_Garage )
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